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EU Funds:
What needs to change?

   

What should be changed in the cohesion policy in order to allow for more efficient and sustainable use of EU funds?

Rules: more checks and more transparency
In terms of the rules, more checks on the projects and more transparency in the decision making process are sorely needed. Before money is spent, proper needs assessments, cost-benefit analyses and environmental impact assessments must be carried out. The costly, inefficient or damaging investments of the past must be stopped. If, for example, assessments of environmental impacts had been carried out properly, many of the damaging projects would never have taken place or would be implemented very differently. Projects that breach the law must no longer be approved.

Greater say for civil society
Citizen groups and NGO watchdogs should also be given a greater voice in the process to offset the disproportionate influence of construction lobbies geared up to profit from the billions in the EU coffers. According to Transparency International’s latest report, the construction sector is more prone to corruption than any other economic sector. As this is the sector most benefiting from the cohesion policy, the governments and the EU must strongly insist on the proper use of the funds, transparency and civil society involvement.

Big shift in funding priorities
As for the funding priorities, these need to be radically shifted. Across Central and Eastern Europe, where energy use per unit of GDP is twice as high as in the old member states, the funds could help secure massive energy savings and thus economic gains. The region's large but unused renewable energy potential is also desperate for investment. In the transport sector, funds could help upgrade the existing railway networks, renew regional roads and improve urban public transport – rather than being ploughed into thousands of kilometers of new motorways. As about 20,000 people get killed in road accidents in the new member states every year - almost three times more per number of cars than in the old ones – road safety improvements should also be a top priority. In the waste sector, recycling and waste reduction projects are cheaper and provide more jobs in comparison with the currently promoted landfill and incineration plants. Most importantly, increased funding for education and training is a must for the new member states’ long-term development. In order to create the knowledge-based economy that the EU officially wants to promote, the EU needs to invest in human brains rather than in concrete.

See detailed policy recommendations of the NGO Coalition for Sustainable EU Funds!

 

 

 Publications

 

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Letter with six recommendations on the funding of major projects to DG Regional Policy - May 24, 2006

 

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Delivering Sustainable Development: Environmental NGOs' common position on the European Regional Policy after 2006
May 2004
BG - CZ - DE - EN - ES - EST - FR - HU - LT - LV - PL - SI - SK

 

 Links

 

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NGO Coalition for Sustainable EU Funds

 

         

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